Supported Versions of Oracle Solaris OS, Firmware, and Software
Determining Oracle Solaris 11 OS Package Update Version
Determining Oracle Solaris 10 Patch Revision
Minimum Required Patchset for Oracle Solaris 10 08/11 OS
Minimum Required Patchset for Oracle Solaris 10 09/10 OS
Minimum Required Patchsets and SPARC Bundle for Oracle Solaris 10 10/09 OS
ALOM CMT Compatibility Shell Not Supported
Power Supply Inrush/Input Surge Current Information
Sun Type 6 Keyboards Are Not Supported by SPARC T3 Series Servers
Hardware RAID 1E Not Supported
Server Panics When Booting From a USB Thumbdrive Attached to the Front USB Ports (CR 6983185)
Copper QSFP Cables Not Supported (CR 6941888)
Error Messages Not Retained After UE and CE Memory Failures (CR 6990058)
Watchdog Timeouts Might Occur Under Very Heavy Load (CR 6994535)
Unrecoverable USB Hardware Errors Occur In Some Circumstances (CR 6995634)
Replace Faulty DIMMs With Uncorrectable Errors (UEs) As Soon As Possible (CR 6996144)
Intermittent Power Supply Faults Occur During Power On (CR 7066165)
Voltage Fault Prevents Host Power-On (CR 7003014)
Static/Dynamic Input/Output Not Currently Supported
Oracle Solaris OS Has Changed How It Specifies Logical Device Names
The cfgadm -al Command Takes a Long Time to Print Output (CR 6937169)
False nxge Warning Messages (CR 6938085)
Spurious Interrupt Message in System Console (CR 6963563)
The prtpicl Command Does Not Display Drive Information (CR 6963594)
Missing Interrupt Causes USB Hub Hotplug Thread to Hang, Resulting In Process Hangs (CR 6968801)
Long Local Console Delays During Login or Logout of Oracle Solaris (CR 6971884)
Spurious Error Message During Initial Oracle Solaris OS Installation (CR 6971896)
SDIO Policy Violations Might Cause the Primary Domain To Panic During Boot (CR 6983964)
Oracle Enterprise Manager Process Hangs and Becomes Unkillable (CR 6994300)
Intermittent WARNING: ios#, peu# Link Width x8 Link Speed GEN1 Messages (CR 6958263)
Cold Reset Adds One Day to System Time (CR 7127740)
Performing stop /SYS with HOST_COOLDOWN Policy Enabled Generates a Critical Voltage Fault
If you use the nvalias OBP command to make custom system settings, you must update these settings if the system reconfigures itself after a hardware failure.
For example, if the system experiences a hardware failure such as a failed CMP, the system will reconfigure the I/O device paths during the next reboot. If you set a custom device path to a boot disk using the nvalias command, the system will not reconfigure the custom device path and the server will not boot the operating system. You must rediscover the device path to the boot disk and update the nvalias setting accordingly.